Top Banner
Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine UWSMPH
44

Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Dec 18, 2015

Download

Documents

Peter Cross
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective

Emergency Medicine Symposium

October 3, 2008

Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP

Pediatric Emergency Medicine

UWSMPH

Page 2: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Objectives

• Historical model

• Barriers prehspital and ED

• Evidence based advances and future

Page 3: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Reference case

Your 5 year old son Johnny falls off the backyard jungle gym and has a deformed arm. Patient has an IV started and receives 2 mg of morphine in route.

Page 4: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Issues

• Head injury

• Unable to obtain vital signs

• Prolonged transport

• morphine versus fentanyl– routes of administration

• Role of accepting MD/medical control– Level of transport service– Factors for additional doses

Page 5: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Advancement in pre-hospital care

• “scoop and run” – GTHTTH

• “stay and play”

• “play and run”

Page 6: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Pre-hospital

• 14.5 million EMS transports annually– Moderate to severe pain in 20%– 50% are children – McLean SA, PEC, 2002

• Only 6 papers prehospital pain management (1980-1996)

• Challenges and barriers in prehospital setting– Consent– Methodology

Page 7: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Statements

• “Relieving discomfort may be the most important task EMS providers perform for majority of their patients.” ACEP 1997

• “Relief of discomfort is the most relevant outcomes measure for majority of pre-hospital conditions” EMSOP / NHTSA 1999

Page 8: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

• Assess for circulation and sensation • Check for other injuries• Age appropriate pain assessment 8/10• Screams with attempts to splint• Imagery, start IV, fentanyl• 5 minutes later, pain score is 3/10• Arm is splinted with minor discomfort • Gently placed in the rig and slow ride to ED• Reassessment before ED; pain score 2/10

In the perfect world…

Page 9: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Prehospital opioid administration for fractures

Prehospital ED

White 1999 Adults 1.8%

McEachin 2002 Adults 18.3% 91.1%

Hennes 2003 Adults 10.5%

children 3.0%

Swor 2005 Adults 26.3% 87.8%

children 21.2% 91.1%

Page 10: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Time to first dose of opioid

Pre-hospital ED

Swor 2005 22 min 88 min

Silka 2002 109 min

Hennes 2006 (unpublished data) 17 min 57 min

Scoop and run result in significant delay in analgesic administration.

Page 11: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Pain Management Barriers

• Provider barriers

• System barriers

• Patient barriers

Page 12: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Survey dataHennes, et al. Prehospital Emerg Care 2005;9:32-39

• Reasons for withholding morphine in children– Inability to assess pain– Patient refusal– Drug seeking behavior– No indications for vascular access

Page 13: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Common assumptions & attitudes

• There is given amount of pain for given injury• Newborn babies do not feel pain• Children have no memory of pain • Children metabolize opioid differently• Children may become addicted to narcotics• Pain is character building• Use of pain medication is sign of weakness• No pain, no gain

Page 14: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Provider barriersKim et al. 2006 NAEMSP abstract

• Doubts the need for pain management• Lack of education

– Pain physiology & pharmacology

• Difficulty in pain assessment– Lack of easy to use assessment tool for children– Questions the validity and reliability of tools

• Negative incentives– Need for an IV & difficult IV– Transport time– Work load– Negative feedback from Docs

Page 15: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

System barriers

• Lack of education– Physiology, assessment, pharmacokinetics,

outcomes data

• Medical control– Reluctant to provide pain meds – Ricard-Hibbon 1999 & Fullerton-Gleason 2002

• Multiple tiered system– EMT vs. paramedic

Page 16: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Patient barriers

• No pain meds prior to ED (74%) Spedding 1999

– harmful– hospital’s responsibility– not available

• 70% of adults with severe pain did not ask for pain medication Richrd-Hibbon 1999

Page 17: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

ED physicians When should EMS provide analgesia?

• based on the obvious deformity it’s so easy….just get a doctor and get the morphine

• Transport time again • What if I have a little finger….put an IV in• depends too on how bad it actually looks• I think if it is obviously deformed they think

they should put an IV in• Don’t they have to call the doctor if they have

an IV?

Page 18: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

ED physiciansIs prehospital pain management a benefit?

• Yes– Calmer patients– Expedites evaluation– If it is grossly deformed, no problem

• No– If short transport time– Unable to evaluate– If they mess up…

Page 19: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

ED physicians Focus group summary 2004

• Not aware of pain protocols• Limited experience with prehospital pain

management• Pain assessment report is rarely given• It seems easy to OD kids

Page 20: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Evidenced interventions

• Protocol liberalization Pointer et al. PEC 2005

– Online to offline administration of morphine– 2.8% to 19% increase in MS administration

• Education French et al. PEC 2005

– 3 hour educational intervention– Pain med use 20.4% to 24.5%– NP intervention 2.5% to 34.7%– Pain scores 44.5% to 95.4%

Page 21: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Milwaukee Prehospital Pain Management Group

• ‘Impact of an educational module on prehospital pain management in children’

• Targeted Issue Grant by EMSC 2004-2007• PAMPPER (Pain Assessment and Management

for Prehospital Pediatric EmeRgencies)

Page 22: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Reference Case

Consider following issues during the presentation

Q1: Why is prehospital pain management important?

Q2: Initial assessment and intervention?

Q3: Best method of pain assessment?

Q4: Indications for pain management?

Q5: What determines the need for pain medications?

Q6: What medications should be considered?

Q7: Dose and route of administration?

Page 23: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Negative Effects of Untreated Pain

• Interferes with normal bodily function– Increased metabolic rate– Interferes with clotting– Alters immune function

• Emotional stress/Suffering– Anxiety (Fear of unknown)– Powerlessness– Loss of control

Q1: Why is prehospital pain management important?

Page 24: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

• Biochemical: stress hormone release – Epinephrine and norepinephrine– Steroids, growth hormone, and glucagon– Increase metabolic rate

• May cause cardiopulmonary instability

• Physiologic– Tachycardia, tachypnea, BP elevation

• Behavioral– Facial grimace– Physical withdraw, kicking– Crying

• The response varies in every patient based on age, development, and prior experience

Pain results in a stress response

Page 25: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

• Biochemical: stress hormone release – Epinephrine and norepinephrine– Steroids, growth hormone, and glucagon– Increase metabolic rate

• May cause cardiopulmonary instability

• Physiologic– Tachycardia, tachypnea, BP elevation

• Behavioral– Facial grimace– Physical withdraw, kicking– Crying

• The response varies in every patient based on age, development, and prior experience

Pain results in a stress response

Page 26: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

• Biochemical: stress hormone release – Epinephrine and norepinephrine– Steroids, growth hormone, and glucagon– Increase metabolic rate

• May cause cardiopulmonary instability

• Physiologic– Tachycardia, tachypnea, BP elevation

• Behavioral– Facial grimace– Physical withdraw, kicking– Crying

• The response varies in every patient based on age, development, and prior experience

Pain results in a stress response

Page 27: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

• Biochemical: stress hormone release – Epinephrine and norepinephrine– Steroids, growth hormone, and glucagon– Increase metabolic rate

• May cause cardiopulmonary instability

• Physiologic– Tachycardia, tachypnea, BP elevation

• Behavioral– Facial grimace– Physical withdraw, kicking– Crying

• The response varies in every patient based on age, development, and prior experience

Pain results in a stress response

Page 28: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

The evidence: Opioids decreases the stress response

• Pain and its effects in the human neonate and fetus. Anand KJ. NEJM. 1987;317(21):1321-9.

– A landmark publication that called into question the widely held belief that neonates do not have the neurophysiologic apparatus to experience pain

– Also decreased stress response and decrease morbidity and mortality after major surgery in neonates.

• Neonatal and pediatric stress responses to anesthesia and operation. Anand KJ. Int Anes Clin. 1988 ;26(3):218-25.

– Benefit seen beyond neonatal period

Page 29: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

The evidence: Effect of single painful procedure

• Effect of neonatal circumcision on pain response during subsequent routine vaccination. – Taddio et al. Lancet. 1997:349(9052);599-603.– No pain management during circumcision results in

increased pain response at 4-6 months later

• Consequences of inadequate analgesia during painful procedures in children. Weisman et al. Arch Ped Adolesc Med 1998

– Inadequate pain management during spinal tap results in increased pain scores during subsequent procedures

Q1: Why is prehospital pain management important?

Page 30: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Why is prehospital pain management important?

• Decreases pain and suffering

• Provides comfort during transport

• Expedites evaluation and interventions in the emergency Department

• May improve outcome

Page 31: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Most appropriate pain scale for 4 to 16 years

• Faces Pain Scale -Revised –The Faces Pain Scale - Revised: Hicks CL et al.Pain 2001;93:173-183.

–Validated in children“true representation of pain”

“These faces show how much something can hurt. This face (point to the left-most face) shows no pain. The faces show more and more pain (point left to right) up to this one (point to right –most face) it shows very much pain. Point to the face that show how much you hurt now.”

0 2 4 6 8 10

Q3: Best method of pain assessment?

Page 32: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Pre-hospital Pain Interventions

• ABCDEs first

• Nonpharmacologic

• Pharmacologic

Q4: Interventions for pain?

Page 33: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Non-Pharmacologic Pain InterventionsInjury specific

• Rest• Ice• Compression• Elevate• Splinting• Dressing• Positioning

Q4: Interventions for pain?

Page 34: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Non Pharmacologic Pain InterventionsFear and Anxiety reduction

Method Age Description (examples)

Talking All Form of distraction (explanation)

Distraction All Toys, books, music, talking…

Parental presence All Reassurance and familiarity

Patient Control >3y Retains self control

Imagery >3y Imagining being elsewhere

Truth >5y Be honest (this needle will hurt a bit)

Explanation >5y Removes the fear of unknown & announces what to expect

Q4: Interventions for pain?

Page 35: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

When non-pharmacologic interventions are not enough?• Reassessment of pain

• Pharmacologic intervention – Continued moderate to severe pain (score 4)

– morphine sulfate

Q4: Intervention for pain?

Q5: What determines the need for pain meds?

Q6: What meds should be considered?

Page 36: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Pharmacologic interventions

• Morphine– Gold standard– IM/IV/SQ

• Fentanyl– Less hemodynamic effects– IM/IV/IN

Page 37: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Wisconsin pain management guideline (EMSC recommendations)

• Assessment: 0-10 faces scale• Interventions: non-pharmacological• If pain score > 4, morphine 0.1 mg/kg• May repeat every 10-15 min up to 10 mg• Only if SBP > 80 in children• Fentanyl per local EMS guideline• Medical control for additional doses

Page 38: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Reference case

Your 5 year old son Johnny falls off the backyard jungle gym and has a deformed arm. Patient has an IV started and receives 2 mg of morphine in route.

Page 39: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Issues

• Head injury

• Unable to obtain vital signs

• Prolonged transport

• morphine versus fentanyl– routes of administration

• Role of accepting MD/medical control– Level of transport service– Factors for additional doses

Page 40: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Emergency Department events: Patient with a fracture

• Without prehospital pain management– Initial evaluation by

nurse and physician– IV start– Pain meds– Radiograph

• With prehospital pain management– Initial evaluation by

nurse and physician– Radiograph

These 2 steps can be eliminated if patient’s pain is adequately controlled

Manipulation of extremity for x-ray

is Painful

Q1: Why is prehospital pain management important?

* ED staff may not be able to evaluate patient immediately!!!

Page 41: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Why is prehospital pain management important?

Page 42: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Implications for the ED

• Awareness of the EMS protocols

• Confidence in EMS providers

• Voice in your EMS system

• Patient advocacy

• Continuum of pain management

Page 43: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

Overview

• Prehospital pain management is important and needs improvement.

• EMS providers need expertise of ED providers• ED providers must know the EMD protocols• Pain management is a continuum

Page 44: Pediatric Prehospital Pain Management: the ED perspective Emergency Medicine Symposium October 3, 2008 Michael K. Kim, MD, FAAP Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

“To cure sometimes, to relieve often, to comfort always”

15th century French description of role of physician